Bangkok Post

Italian season in limbo with new wave of positive cases

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MILAN: The fate of the Serie A championsh­ip remains in limbo after state scientists met with football bosses in a desperate effort to save the coronaviru­s-interrupte­d season threatened by a new wave of positive tests among players.

The Italian Football Federation (FIGC) huddled with the government’s technical scientific committee on Thursday to discuss details of the medical protocol for a potential return to group training.

The talks came with pressure mounting from sports-deprived fans and sponsors for Italy to follow the German Bundesliga’s lead and return to action.

Sports Minister Vincenzo Spadafora said after the meeting he was “hopeful” team training could resume on May 18.

“There has been a very important, very in-depth meeting, with many requests from doctors and scientists to the FIGC,” Spadafora said on Facebook.

“Now the committee, on the basis of these insights, will draw up its own assessment which will be sent to the Ministry of Health.”

FIGC president Gabriele Gravina has shown an iron will to save the season and avoid “the death of Italian football”.

But time is running out for Serie A which began to descend into chaos at the end of February as the new coronaviru­s swept across Italy’s north — home to big teams such as Inter Milan and Juventus.

The league eventually threw up its hands and suspended the championsh­ip on March 9. Fewer than 500 people had then died of the virus and the league was hoping to kick off again by early April.

Italy’s official toll now stands at about 30,000.

The Italian government has eased lockdown but people still have to respect social distancing rules.

Top clubs in Italy have begun testing players and staff as they prepare to return to training facilities this week for individual sessions.

However, eight players have tested positive so far this week with four from Sampdoria, including one who had previously recovered, three from Fiorentina and one at Torino.

Fiorentina revealed three of the club’s staff had also tested positive for the virus.

Cristiano Ronaldo is observing a 14-day quarantine after returning to Italy from nearly two months of confinemen­t in Portugal.

His Juventus teammate Paulo Dybala has been given the all-clear after first testing positive for the virus together with his girlfriend.

Media reports said the discussion could run on into the weekend as the sides try to figure out proper virus testing procedures and the logistics of travel through contagion zones.

Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte — the first Western leader to impose a national lockdown to ward off the pandemic in March — will have the final say.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Owners of a restaurant in Rome measure the distance between tables to maintain social distancing rules.
REUTERS Owners of a restaurant in Rome measure the distance between tables to maintain social distancing rules.

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